The second day in London for India was a mixed day as India's star boxer Vijendra Singh, Badminton star Parupalli Kashyap and able Tennis youngster Soumyajit Ghosh won their game while badminton star Jwala Gutta along with her partner Ashwani Ponappa lost their first double game. The poor performance of the archery team continues in the second day too.
Country's lone Olympic boxing medallist Vijender Singh did well to subdue Kazakhstan's Danabek Sukhanov with some quick, hard punching to win 14-10 points to end the day on a bright note.
Vijender, 27, who won a bronze at the Beijing Games four years ago, did enough to keep himself ahead in all the three rounds.
He took his time to get the measure of his opponent and once he got into the rhythm he took the first round 5-4.
Vijender cautiously built up the lead in the second round and a 4-3 verdict gave him a cushion of two points going into the last round.
The Indian made sure he stayed ahead in the final round and took it 5-3 using his reach to keep the Kazhak away.
Vijender in the round of 16 faces American Terrell Gausha, who overpowered Andranik Hukobyan of Armenia in the opening round with referee stopping the contest.
Vijender's young teenaged teammate Shiva Thapa put up a gallant show but that was not enough to see him past the first round in the 56 kg.
The 18-year-old, the youngest Indian boxer to qualify for the Olympics, saw his dream crushed by Mexican Oscar Valdez Fierro, who won 14-9.
Olympic first-timers Kashyap and Ghosh went through their first-round matches comfortably, unmindful of what's happening to their colleagues in other disciplines, archery, shooting, weightlifting, rowing and tennis.
Kashyap seemed in great touch as he sped past Belgian Yuhan Tan 21-14, 21-12 in a 38-minute Group D match at the Wembley Arena to move to the second round.
Kashyap's win made up for the tame loss of mixed doubles pair Jwala Gutta and V. Diju, who went down to Indonesia's Tontowi Ahmad and Liliyana Natsi in straight games in their opening group match 16-21, 12-2.
Jwala was on the losing side in the women's doubles, too, as she and her partner Ashwini Ponnappa went down 16-21, 18-21 to the Japanese duo of Mizuki Fujii and Reika Kakiiwa.
Both the mixed doubles and women's doubles teams would need to win their next two group matches to qualify for the knockouts round.
Nineteen-year-old Ghosh kept India's table tennis challenge alive as he moved into the second round of the main draw beating Brazilian Gustavo Tsuboi 4-2 (11-9, 14-12, 7-11, 12-10, 5-11, 12-10) in a 40-minute close contest.
"I should have pushed him hard, but he was good. My shots and serves worked well today. I am happy I have progressed well," said Ghosh, who will take on Matiss Burgis of Latvia in round two.
Earlier, the country's other paddler Ankita Das paid the penalty for making too many unforced errors to bow out of the women's singles competition wit. She lost 1-4 (9-11 8-11 7-11 11-8 and 2-11) to the higher ranked Sara Ramirez of Spain.
The men's archery team which, which qualified at the eleventh hour, began the gloomy procession in the morning at the iconic Lords cricket ground.
The troika of Rahul Banerjee, Jayanta Talukdar and Tarundeep Rai made a sound start but could not retain the momentum as they failed to deliver in crunch situations to finally go down to Japan in a tie-break.
Both teams were tied 214-214 after the stipulated four rounds in the opening elimination round.
The Japanese team comprising Yu Ishizu, Hideki Kikuchi and Takaharu Furukaw held their nerves to shoot two tens and a nine in the shoot-out. In reply, the Indian trio of Jayanta Talukdar, Rahul Banerjee and Tarundeep Rai could manage only 27 points by shooting three nines.
The Indians, however, could have clinched the tie in the fourth round itself had Rahul Banerjee managed to bring home ten points off the final arrow. But he could manage only nine, which pushed the clash to the tie-break. Rai, who hit the previous Indian arrow, also got a poor eight, and in the end these two poor efforts crushed the team's chances.
The saga of failures stretched to the historic Wimbledon grass court, with the Indian women's doubles pair of Sania Mirza and Rushmi Chakarvarthi getting knocked out of the tennis competition with a 1-6, 6-3, 1-6 defeat to Chia-Jung Chuang and Su -Wei Hsieh of Chinese Taipei in the opening round.
In the power sports of weight lifting, women's 48 kg competitor Soniya Ngangbam Chanu had to be satisfied with the seventh spot with a total haul of 171 kgs (74 kg in snath and 97 kg in clean and jerk).
The country's campaign also floundered at the range, from where there has been much pre-Games talk of attaining medal successes. Pistol shooter Vijay Kumar finished way down at the 31st slot in the qualification round garnering only 570 points, thereby failing to reach the final of the men's 10metre air pistol event.
In rowing, Swarn Singh Virk failed to qualify for the quarterfinal of the men's single sculls after he finished fifth with a timing of 6:54.04 in heat 1. The Indian, however, has qualified for the repechage round that kept alive his hopes.
--With IANS Inputs--
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Comments:
Abhishek Bhardwaj
July 30, 2012 at 2:55 PMRohit Paul
July 30, 2012 at 2:29 PMplay well atleast 4,5 gold toh lao.............jai hind
Roshan Bisht
July 29, 2012 at 11:53 PMhey bhagwan hmari olympic me bhaag lene wali sabhi teamon ko vijay banaye...........jai hind.....
Bhagwaan vijayi tab hi banayenge jab team khud bhi kuch layak ho. China has give military level training to its players. They had a vision and they prepared since past 3-4 years and it is reaping the dividends now. They intend to not only a military and economic super-power but also a Sports super power.
Hamare yahaan to Olypmics se 2 mahine pahle yeh ladai hoti hai ki tennis ki doubles team mein kaun-kaun khelenge. With that kind of approach I dont hink India can make a dent in the Olympics. The results of Day 2 are as expected. We will win a few medals here and there but no significant improvement as such. It is a pity that a country with population > 122 crores cant win even 20 medals in Olympics but this result is very much a possible the way we are performing now.